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In 2010, the greater Osaka region had 13 million rail passengers daily (see Transport in Keihanshin) of which the Osaka Municipal Subway (as it was then known) accounted for 2.29 million. [ 5 ] Osaka Metro is the only subway system in Japan to be partially legally classified as a tram system, [ b ] whereas all other subway systems in Japan are ...
The Osaka Metro Midōsuji Line (御堂筋線, Midōsuji-sen) is a rapid transit line in Osaka, Japan, operated by Osaka Metro. Constructed under Midōsuji , a major north-south street, it is the oldest line in the Osaka subway system and the second oldest in Japan, following the Tokyo Metro Ginza Line .
List of Osaka Metro stations lists all of the stations in the Osaka Metro and includes the station's name, picture, metro lines serving that station, location (ward or city), design, and daily usage. The Osaka Metro consists of eight subway lines and one automated people mover , with a total of 133 stations [ 1 ] (108 stations [ 2 ] counting ...
Namba Station (難波駅, なんば駅, Nanba-eki) is a name shared by two physically separated railway stations in the Namba district of Chūō-ku, Osaka, Japan, operated by Nankai Electric Railway [1] and the Osaka Metro.
24 March 1967: Opening of the Higashi-Umeda – Tanimachi Yonchōme section as Osaka Subway Line 2. [4] Trains started running in 2-car formation. October, 1967: Automatic train operation (ATO) trialled on Line 2, trials ended in February 1968.
The Osaka Metro Nagahori Tsurumi-ryokuchi Line (長堀鶴見緑地線, Nagahori Tsurumi-ryokuchi-sen) is an underground rapid transit system in Osaka, Japan, operated by Osaka Metro. It was the first linear motor rapid transit line constructed in Japan (and the first outside North America, predated only by the Intermediate Capacity Transit ...
The Osaka Metro Sennichimae Line (千日前線, Sennichimae-sen) is an underground rapid transit line in Osaka, Japan.It is one of the lines of Osaka Metro.It links the northwestern district of Fukushima-ku and the southeastern district of Ikuno-ku with the central commercial and entertainment district of Namba.
The Yotsubashi Line runs in a north and south direction. connecting the Osaka Metro Nankō Port Town Line at Suminoekōen Station.At first, it was a branch of the Osaka Metro Midōsuji Line, branching off at Daikokuchō Station but was extended north to Nishi-Umeda Station and made a separate line.